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Generalized stationary phase approximations for mountain waves

Authors :
Dave Broutman
Stephen D. Eckermann
Harold Knight
Source :
Physics of Fluids. 28:046601
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2016.

Abstract

Large altitude asymptotic approximations are derived for vertical displacements due to mountain waves generated by hydrostatic wind flow over arbitrary topography. This leads to new asymptotic analytic expressions for wave-induced vertical displacement for mountains with an elliptical Gaussian shape and with the major axis oriented at any angle relative to the background wind. The motivation is to understand local maxima in vertical displacement amplitude at a given height for elliptical mountains aligned at oblique angles to the wind direction, as identified in Eckermann et al. [“Effects of horizontal geometrical spreading on the parameterization of orographic gravity-wave drag. Part 1: Numerical transform solutions,” J. Atmos. Sci. 72, 2330–2347 (2015)]. The standard stationary phase method reproduces one type of local amplitude maximum that migrates downwind with increasing altitude. Another type of local amplitude maximum stays close to the vertical axis over the center of the mountain, and a new generalized stationary phase method is developed to describe this other type of local amplitude maximum and the horizontal variation of wave-induced vertical displacement near the vertical axis of the mountain in the large altitude limit. The new generalized stationary phase method describes the asymptotic behavior of integrals where the asymptotic parameter is raised to two different powers (1/2 and 1) rather than just one power as in the standard stationary phase method. The vertical displacement formulas are initially derived assuming a uniform background wind but are extended to accommodate both vertical shear with a fixed wind direction and vertical variations in the buoyancy frequency.

Details

ISSN :
10897666 and 10706631
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics of Fluids
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9b9bd60b4a02dd397f5bf27919e20c5c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4944853